Photo credit: OTNL. We can't see the new element 117, but the berkelium used to make it is held between these tweezers

Now it's been a few years since I was a science handling guy, but THAT ISN'T A FARKING TWEEZERS YOU IDIOT. See those two white reflections of overhead lights on the "tweezers"? See the angle they're at? That's not the kind of reflection you get with tweezers, that's glass.

I remember when we were taught that bismuth is the heaviest stablest element, but now it's lead, because bismuth is actually radioactive. Its half-life is so long, though, that it's less radioactive than the carbon in your body...

Myria:I remember when we were taught that bismuth is the heaviest stablest element, but now it's lead, because bismuth is actually radioactive. Its half-life is so long, though, that it's less radioactive than the carbon in your body...

BolloxReader:Myria: I remember when we were taught that bismuth is the heaviest stablest element, but now it's lead, because bismuth is actually radioactive. Its half-life is so long, though, that it's less radioactive than the carbon in your body...